Maria Amiel: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Maria_Amiel.png|thumb|Maria Amiel in a library.]] | [[File:Maria_Amiel.png|thumb|Maria Amiel in a library.]] | ||
'''Maria Amiel''' was a hermetic practitioner who lived in western Europe during the 16th century. She was the assistant of [[Bombastus]] from 1524 until 1527. | '''Maria Amiel''' was a hermetic practitioner who lived in western Europe during the 16th century. She was the assistant of [[Bombastus]] from 1524 until 1527. | ||
==Divine Science== | |||
Maria returned to Professor Bombastus' lab and found him with a stranger. Bombastus introduced him as [[Giovanni Borgia]], who greeted her. Giovanni asked the professor questions while Maria remained quiet. However, Bombastus refused to answer his questions, so Borgia demanded him to read the book to get answers. Bombastus confessed the book is incomplete and that he will need " the other half." Not knowing where it is, the professor offered the help of Maria. | Maria returned to Professor Bombastus' lab and found him with a stranger. Bombastus introduced him as [[Giovanni Borgia]], who greeted her. Giovanni asked the professor questions while Maria remained quiet. However, Bombastus refused to answer his questions, so Borgia demanded him to read the book to get answers. Bombastus confessed the book is incomplete and that he will need " the other half." Not knowing where it is, the professor offered the help of Maria. | ||
Maria and Giovanni spend a week in the university library looking for the "Divine Science", as Professor Bombastus calls it. There, Maria learned that Bombastus transmuted silver into gold, and Giovanni wrote down the formula himself. She suggested that he had a vision of the contents of the other half, to which both knew to read books about transmutation. After a long search, they found a journal of a French alchemist, Flamel, who had turned lead into gold, based on the teachings of Abraham of Würzburg. They learned that Abraham had divided his knowledge into two manuscripts: "True Magic" and "Divine Science." Knowing that, the two of them decided to travel to Paris. | Maria and Giovanni spend a week in the university library looking for the "Divine Science", as Professor Bombastus calls it. There, Maria learned that Bombastus transmuted silver into gold, and Giovanni wrote down the formula himself. She suggested that he had a vision of the contents of the other half, to which both knew to read books about transmutation. After a long search, they found a journal of a French alchemist, Flamel, who had turned lead into gold, based on the teachings of Abraham of Würzburg. They learned that Abraham had divided his knowledge into two manuscripts: "True Magic" and "Divine Science." Knowing that, the two of them decided to travel to Paris. | ||
== | ==Source== | ||
* | *''[[Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy]]'': [[Chapter 1 - Maria Amiel]] | ||
[[Category:Characters]] | |||
[[Category: | |||
[[Category:Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy Characters]] | [[Category:Assassin's Creed: Project Legacy Characters]] | ||
Revision as of 20:13, 6 July 2011
Maria Amiel was a hermetic practitioner who lived in western Europe during the 16th century. She was the assistant of Bombastus from 1524 until 1527.
Divine Science
Maria returned to Professor Bombastus' lab and found him with a stranger. Bombastus introduced him as Giovanni Borgia, who greeted her. Giovanni asked the professor questions while Maria remained quiet. However, Bombastus refused to answer his questions, so Borgia demanded him to read the book to get answers. Bombastus confessed the book is incomplete and that he will need " the other half." Not knowing where it is, the professor offered the help of Maria.
Maria and Giovanni spend a week in the university library looking for the "Divine Science", as Professor Bombastus calls it. There, Maria learned that Bombastus transmuted silver into gold, and Giovanni wrote down the formula himself. She suggested that he had a vision of the contents of the other half, to which both knew to read books about transmutation. After a long search, they found a journal of a French alchemist, Flamel, who had turned lead into gold, based on the teachings of Abraham of Würzburg. They learned that Abraham had divided his knowledge into two manuscripts: "True Magic" and "Divine Science." Knowing that, the two of them decided to travel to Paris.